Re: [ubuntu-studio-users] A moment of peace and clarity.

2013-10-12 Thread Ralf Mardorf
On Sat, 2013-10-12 at 05:35 +0200, Kaj Ailomaa wrote:
 $ sudo usermod -a -G audio $USER
 That's it :)

After adding a user to a group, there's the need to log out and in
before it takes effect.



-- 
ubuntu-studio-users mailing list
ubuntu-studio-users@lists.ubuntu.com
Modify settings or unsubscribe at: 
https://lists.ubuntu.com/mailman/listinfo/ubuntu-studio-users


Re: [ubuntu-studio-users] A moment of peace and clarity.

2013-10-12 Thread reSet Sakrecoer
Hi Gord!
While i believe Mike Holstein and Kaj Ailomaa answer your question. I think
i see what you are talking about this time. :)
I believe there is a similar discussion ignited by Anrew Price in the
blender community: User Friendliness.

I know this is a delicate issue, because it's a very hard thing to
accomplish and also because in many ways it stands on a harsh line between
2 scenarios:

1. If everything becomes easy. Then the interest for exploration may vanish.
This scenario is not good for future development.

2.If everything is hard, less people get involved.
This scenario is not good for the expansion of the user-base.

These 2 aspects meet is:
The user-base creates the development.

In these aspects, i think ubuntustudio is very good at balancing this line.
And i want to encourage them in keeping the focus they have shown until
now. Still, i hope your email will echo in a constructive phase.

yours,
Set



On Sat, Oct 12, 2013 at 10:31 AM, Ralf Mardorf
ralf.mard...@alice-dsl.netwrote:

 On Sat, 2013-10-12 at 05:35 +0200, Kaj Ailomaa wrote:
  $ sudo usermod -a -G audio $USER
  That's it :)

 After adding a user to a group, there's the need to log out and in
 before it takes effect.



 --
 ubuntu-studio-users mailing list
 ubuntu-studio-users@lists.ubuntu.com
 Modify settings or unsubscribe at:
 https://lists.ubuntu.com/mailman/listinfo/ubuntu-studio-users




-- 
Set Hallström
AKA
reSet Sakrecoer
http://sakrecoer.com



On Fri, Oct 11, 2013 at 4:28 PM, Gord L Williams i...@gordlwilliams.comwrote:

 Dear list,

 I have had reaction to some comments I have made,  and I have to say
 everyone has acted in a very gentile manner.   Its good when we have
 manners and can express our thought.   Perhaps thats why we are hear rather
 than opening the box and dancing with the latest iPhone or Windows device.

 My comments where about not being able to move freely (FOSS) between
 desktops and choice your poison - yes including imperfect bloatware.  Unity
 anyone?  Gnome?   -  I actually like Gnome 3 because it presents those I
 will call,  dancing people,  with a desktop that has a beat,  for them.
  Its cool and I can dance to it.  to get American Bandstand about it.

 I was in no way attempting to take a swipe at anyone.  I think most of you
 got that,  but apparently some people read things sideways. You can expect
 that, if you make statements.  Probably why I will never be in politics.

 If it was a perfect world,  any distribution would be the same in intent,
  regardless of desktop,  meaning menus and software would be the same.  In
 my crazy world I envision ubuntu - astronomy,  which of course you can say
 the prospects are looking up for.   Wait the big jokes come later

 I see this as an advantage over  dancing peoples devices and os's. Tell us
 what you are and we have something for you already. Perhaps its as easy as
 having interest groups modify based on available software,   they choose
 semi pro stuff like Ardour which seems to be tin-cup ware now,   and truly
 FOSS. But that may not be the desire.

 Ubuntustudio does a great job of being a studio.  No knocks at all.   I do
 not record at a studio professionally for a number of reasons.  The setups
 and the bookings take time,  and your a number is one reason.  I have
 recorded in a professional hardware based studio and I managed the talent
 for that, so my reasoning isn't superfluous.  Sitting on the stool talking
 into a $3000 microphone is a kick,  but doesn't bring it home economically.
   Studio time like that costs and has to be rolled into the price.

 I have alway been about bringing that cost down,  and very Ubuntu about
 what I do.  If a traveler wanders into a village,  the village will see to
 his needs without a thought as to what they need.   I believe Nelson
 Mandella close enough.

 My point is if you can encourage more people to explore their talent as a
 photographer,  graphic artist, and media producer,  the world will be
 better.  If the distribution fits more people,  if they can make sense of
 it without a huge learning curve and yes,  if they can dance around the
 open box,  so to speak,  as humans tend to do then maybe we have something.
   We have something,  not just the geeks that watch their machine
 efficiently eat up compute cycles for bragging rights.  Thats already
 there,  enjoy your command line.

 Often there is great resistance to the paradigm shifting,  and there are
 reasons and excuses not to move forward on it.   It is a good deal of work
 for everyone involved in a distribution to make a change,  any change,
  even a small one.  A radical change in thinking even more so,  it can be
 disruptive or worse.   So,  I do not propose that and I never will.
 Ubuntustudio is a great distribution and has been a great distribution and
 probably will continue to be so for years to come.

 That as they say is the bottom line,  thank you Ubuntustudio. Period.

 --
 ubuntu-studio-users mailing list
 

Re: [ubuntu-studio-users] A moment of peace and clarity.

2013-10-12 Thread Pete Wright
I haven't seen the user friendliness discussion on Blender, but one
senses similar feelings on Gimp discussions and elsewhere.

The thing is that ease of use and ease of learning are not only not the
same thing, but they tend to be mutually exclusive.



On Sat, Oct 12, 2013 at 4:24 AM, reSet Sakrecoer sakrec...@gmail.comwrote:

 Hi Gord!
 While i believe Mike Holstein and Kaj Ailomaa answer your question. I
 think i see what you are talking about this time. :)
 I believe there is a similar discussion ignited by Anrew Price in the
 blender community: User Friendliness.

 I know this is a delicate issue, because it's a very hard thing to
 accomplish and also because in many ways it stands on a harsh line between
 2 scenarios:

 1. If everything becomes easy. Then the interest for exploration may
 vanish.
 This scenario is not good for future development.

 2.If everything is hard, less people get involved.
 This scenario is not good for the expansion of the user-base.

 These 2 aspects meet is:
 The user-base creates the development.

 In these aspects, i think ubuntustudio is very good at balancing this
 line. And i want to encourage them in keeping the focus they have shown
 until now. Still, i hope your email will echo in a constructive phase.

 yours,
 Set



 On Sat, Oct 12, 2013 at 10:31 AM, Ralf Mardorf ralf.mard...@alice-dsl.net
  wrote:

 On Sat, 2013-10-12 at 05:35 +0200, Kaj Ailomaa wrote:
  $ sudo usermod -a -G audio $USER
  That's it :)

 After adding a user to a group, there's the need to log out and in
 before it takes effect.



 --
 ubuntu-studio-users mailing list
 ubuntu-studio-users@lists.ubuntu.com
 Modify settings or unsubscribe at:
 https://lists.ubuntu.com/mailman/listinfo/ubuntu-studio-users




 --
 Set Hallström
 AKA
 reSet Sakrecoer
 http://sakrecoer.com



 On Fri, Oct 11, 2013 at 4:28 PM, Gord L Williams 
 i...@gordlwilliams.comwrote:

 Dear list,

 I have had reaction to some comments I have made,  and I have to say
 everyone has acted in a very gentile manner.   Its good when we have
 manners and can express our thought.   Perhaps thats why we are hear rather
 than opening the box and dancing with the latest iPhone or Windows device.

 My comments where about not being able to move freely (FOSS) between
 desktops and choice your poison - yes including imperfect bloatware.  Unity
 anyone?  Gnome?   -  I actually like Gnome 3 because it presents those I
 will call,  dancing people,  with a desktop that has a beat,  for them.
  Its cool and I can dance to it.  to get American Bandstand about it.

 I was in no way attempting to take a swipe at anyone.  I think most of
 you got that,  but apparently some people read things sideways. You can
 expect that, if you make statements.  Probably why I will never be in
 politics.

 If it was a perfect world,  any distribution would be the same in intent,
  regardless of desktop,  meaning menus and software would be the same.  In
 my crazy world I envision ubuntu - astronomy,  which of course you can say
 the prospects are looking up for.   Wait the big jokes come later

 I see this as an advantage over  dancing peoples devices and os's. Tell
 us what you are and we have something for you already. Perhaps its as easy
 as having interest groups modify based on available software,   they choose
 semi pro stuff like Ardour which seems to be tin-cup ware now,   and truly
 FOSS. But that may not be the desire.

 Ubuntustudio does a great job of being a studio.  No knocks at all.   I
 do not record at a studio professionally for a number of reasons.  The
 setups and the bookings take time,  and your a number is one reason.  I
 have recorded in a professional hardware based studio and I managed the
 talent for that, so my reasoning isn't superfluous.  Sitting on the stool
 talking into a $3000 microphone is a kick,  but doesn't bring it home
 economically.   Studio time like that costs and has to be rolled into the
 price.

 I have alway been about bringing that cost down,  and very Ubuntu about
 what I do.  If a traveler wanders into a village,  the village will see to
 his needs without a thought as to what they need.   I believe Nelson
 Mandella close enough.

 My point is if you can encourage more people to explore their talent as a
 photographer,  graphic artist, and media producer,  the world will be
 better.  If the distribution fits more people,  if they can make sense of
 it without a huge learning curve and yes,  if they can dance around the
 open box,  so to speak,  as humans tend to do then maybe we have something.
   We have something,  not just the geeks that watch their machine
 efficiently eat up compute cycles for bragging rights.  Thats already
 there,  enjoy your command line.

 Often there is great resistance to the paradigm shifting,  and there are
 reasons and excuses not to move forward on it.   It is a good deal of work
 for everyone involved in a distribution to make a change,  any change,
  even a small one.  A 

Re: [ubuntu-studio-users] A moment of peace and clarity.

2013-10-11 Thread Mike Holstein
On Fri, Oct 11, 2013 at 10:28 AM, Gord L Williams i...@gordlwilliams.comwrote:

 Dear list,

 I have had reaction to some comments I have made,  and I have to say
 everyone has acted in a very gentile manner.   Its good when we have
 manners and can express our thought.   Perhaps thats why we are hear rather
 than opening the box and dancing with the latest iPhone or Windows device.

 My comments where about not being able to move freely (FOSS) between
 desktops and choice your poison - yes including imperfect bloatware.  Unity
 anyone?  Gnome?   -  I actually like Gnome 3 because it presents those I
 will call,  dancing people,  with a desktop that has a beat,  for them.
  Its cool and I can dance to it.  to get American Bandstand about it.

 I was in no way attempting to take a swipe at anyone.  I think most of you
 got that,  but apparently some people read things sideways. You can expect
 that, if you make statements.  Probably why I will never be in politics.

 If it was a perfect world,  any distribution would be the same in intent,
  regardless of desktop,  meaning menus and software would be the same.  In
 my crazy world I envision ubuntu - astronomy,  which of course you can say
 the prospects are looking up for.   Wait the big jokes come later

 I see this as an advantage over  dancing peoples devices and os's. Tell us
 what you are and we have something for you already. Perhaps its as easy as
 having interest groups modify based on available software,   they choose
 semi pro stuff like Ardour which seems to be tin-cup ware now,   and truly
 FOSS. But that may not be the desire.

 Ubuntustudio does a great job of being a studio.  No knocks at all.   I do
 not record at a studio professionally for a number of reasons.  The setups
 and the bookings take time,  and your a number is one reason.  I have
 recorded in a professional hardware based studio and I managed the talent
 for that, so my reasoning isn't superfluous.  Sitting on the stool talking
 into a $3000 microphone is a kick,  but doesn't bring it home economically.
   Studio time like that costs and has to be rolled into the price.

 I have alway been about bringing that cost down,  and very Ubuntu about
 what I do.  If a traveler wanders into a village,  the village will see to
 his needs without a thought as to what they need.   I believe Nelson
 Mandella close enough.

 My point is if you can encourage more people to explore their talent as a
 photographer,  graphic artist, and media producer,  the world will be
 better.  If the distribution fits more people,  if they can make sense of
 it without a huge learning curve and yes,  if they can dance around the
 open box,  so to speak,  as humans tend to do then maybe we have something.
   We have something,  not just the geeks that watch their machine
 efficiently eat up compute cycles for bragging rights.  Thats already
 there,  enjoy your command line.

 Often there is great resistance to the paradigm shifting,  and there are
 reasons and excuses not to move forward on it.   It is a good deal of work
 for everyone involved in a distribution to make a change,  any change,
  even a small one.  A radical change in thinking even more so,  it can be
 disruptive or worse.   So,  I do not propose that and I never will.
 Ubuntustudio is a great distribution and has been a great distribution and
 probably will continue to be so for years to come.

 That as they say is the bottom line,  thank you Ubuntustudio. Period.



ubuntustudio either fits your needs or it doesnt. it is what it is, and
cant be what its not. one thing ubuntustudio does well is make sure that
multimedia packages and meta packages are available and maintained in the
default ubuntu repos. these are used by the ubuntustudio distro, but they
can always (and usually quite easily) be added into whatever desktop anyone
chooses to use, as well as in the spin-offs such as mint. if a user wants
unity, they can install the main vanilla ubuntu and add what they want from
the ubuntustudio pacakges. users are able to and encouraged to do so, and
also, able to and encouraged to test, and make sure that things are working
in other environments and report (constructively and properly) bugs and
issues. there has been some great efforts made to make sure that
ubuntustudio could be installed with several different desktops as well as
many workflows.

as a user, its important to keep what is opinion separated from the facts.
is ubuntustudio the best? i think it is, because i prefer it and it fits my
needs well, but there are many other opensource options that utilize and
provide the same tools, and well as many commercial offerings that offer
ways to get the same work done... its really up to the individual to
determine what is the best fit.. we all know that ubuntustudio is quite
capable.

cheers and i hope you enjoy!





 --
 ubuntu-studio-users mailing list
 ubuntu-studio-users@lists.**ubuntu.comubuntu-studio-users@lists.ubuntu.com
 

Re: [ubuntu-studio-users] A moment of peace and clarity.

2013-10-11 Thread Pete Wright
Personally what I like best about Ubuntustudio is the obvious dedication of
the team to making a great collection of tools for creative humans of all
types. Visual artists ought to feel at home here; certainly I do
(writer,film-maker, and photographer).

Tied for first place is the group of users I get a glimpse of on this and
other lists such as LAU and GIMP.

Heartfelt regards to all.
Pete


On Fri, Oct 11, 2013 at 8:27 AM, Mike Holstein mikeh...@gmail.com wrote:




 On Fri, Oct 11, 2013 at 10:28 AM, Gord L Williams 
 i...@gordlwilliams.comwrote:

 Dear list,

 I have had reaction to some comments I have made,  and I have to say
 everyone has acted in a very gentile manner.   Its good when we have
 manners and can express our thought.   Perhaps thats why we are hear rather
 than opening the box and dancing with the latest iPhone or Windows device.

 My comments where about not being able to move freely (FOSS) between
 desktops and choice your poison - yes including imperfect bloatware.  Unity
 anyone?  Gnome?   -  I actually like Gnome 3 because it presents those I
 will call,  dancing people,  with a desktop that has a beat,  for them.
  Its cool and I can dance to it.  to get American Bandstand about it.

 I was in no way attempting to take a swipe at anyone.  I think most of
 you got that,  but apparently some people read things sideways. You can
 expect that, if you make statements.  Probably why I will never be in
 politics.

 If it was a perfect world,  any distribution would be the same in intent,
  regardless of desktop,  meaning menus and software would be the same.  In
 my crazy world I envision ubuntu - astronomy,  which of course you can say
 the prospects are looking up for.   Wait the big jokes come later

 I see this as an advantage over  dancing peoples devices and os's. Tell
 us what you are and we have something for you already. Perhaps its as easy
 as having interest groups modify based on available software,   they choose
 semi pro stuff like Ardour which seems to be tin-cup ware now,   and truly
 FOSS. But that may not be the desire.

 Ubuntustudio does a great job of being a studio.  No knocks at all.   I
 do not record at a studio professionally for a number of reasons.  The
 setups and the bookings take time,  and your a number is one reason.  I
 have recorded in a professional hardware based studio and I managed the
 talent for that, so my reasoning isn't superfluous.  Sitting on the stool
 talking into a $3000 microphone is a kick,  but doesn't bring it home
 economically.   Studio time like that costs and has to be rolled into the
 price.

 I have alway been about bringing that cost down,  and very Ubuntu about
 what I do.  If a traveler wanders into a village,  the village will see to
 his needs without a thought as to what they need.   I believe Nelson
 Mandella close enough.

 My point is if you can encourage more people to explore their talent as a
 photographer,  graphic artist, and media producer,  the world will be
 better.  If the distribution fits more people,  if they can make sense of
 it without a huge learning curve and yes,  if they can dance around the
 open box,  so to speak,  as humans tend to do then maybe we have something.
   We have something,  not just the geeks that watch their machine
 efficiently eat up compute cycles for bragging rights.  Thats already
 there,  enjoy your command line.

 Often there is great resistance to the paradigm shifting,  and there are
 reasons and excuses not to move forward on it.   It is a good deal of work
 for everyone involved in a distribution to make a change,  any change,
  even a small one.  A radical change in thinking even more so,  it can be
 disruptive or worse.   So,  I do not propose that and I never will.
 Ubuntustudio is a great distribution and has been a great distribution and
 probably will continue to be so for years to come.

 That as they say is the bottom line,  thank you Ubuntustudio. Period.



 ubuntustudio either fits your needs or it doesnt. it is what it is, and
 cant be what its not. one thing ubuntustudio does well is make sure that
 multimedia packages and meta packages are available and maintained in the
 default ubuntu repos. these are used by the ubuntustudio distro, but they
 can always (and usually quite easily) be added into whatever desktop anyone
 chooses to use, as well as in the spin-offs such as mint. if a user wants
 unity, they can install the main vanilla ubuntu and add what they want from
 the ubuntustudio pacakges. users are able to and encouraged to do so, and
 also, able to and encouraged to test, and make sure that things are working
 in other environments and report (constructively and properly) bugs and
 issues. there has been some great efforts made to make sure that
 ubuntustudio could be installed with several different desktops as well as
 many workflows.

 as a user, its important to keep what is opinion separated from the facts.
 is ubuntustudio the best? i think 

Re: [ubuntu-studio-users] A moment of peace and clarity.

2013-10-11 Thread Kaj Ailomaa
On Fri, Oct 11, 2013, at 04:28 PM, Gord L Williams wrote:
 Dear list,
 
 I have had reaction to some comments I have made,  and I have to say 
 everyone has acted in a very gentile manner.   Its good when we have 
 manners and can express our thought.   Perhaps thats why we are hear 
 rather than opening the box and dancing with the latest iPhone or 
 Windows device.
 
 My comments where about not being able to move freely (FOSS) between 
 desktops and choice your poison - yes including imperfect bloatware.  
 Unity anyone?  Gnome?   -  I actually like Gnome 3 because it presents 
 those I will call,  dancing people,  with a desktop that has a beat,  
 for them.  Its cool and I can dance to it.  to get American Bandstand 
 about it.
 

Not sure if it was mentioned, but one of the goals we've had is to add
the possibility to choose Desktop Environment during installation. Might
become reality for the 14.04 release.

Until then, if you want to add the audio stuff to any other official
flavor, first install the flavor of your choice, then do:

$ sudo apt-get update  sudo apt-get install linux-lowlatency
ubuntustudio-audio
$ sudo usermod -a -G audio $USER

Make sure to answer yes to realtime, when jackd is installed.
That's it :)

/Kaj Ailomaa - Ubuntu Studio project lead

-- 
ubuntu-studio-users mailing list
ubuntu-studio-users@lists.ubuntu.com
Modify settings or unsubscribe at: 
https://lists.ubuntu.com/mailman/listinfo/ubuntu-studio-users